Baltimore, MD - Aug. 18, 2020 - It was just one week ago today the unfathomable explosion occurred and sent shock waves throughout our district and city.
I arrived at the scene just minutes after the blast and immediately encountered several neighbors running from their homes covered in shattered glass and blood. I could not believe what my eyes were seeing. Other neighbors were running towards the wreckage to help find anyone in need. The damage and shattered windows spanned across many blocks.
A few minutes later, hundreds of firefighters from Baltimore City, County & Pikesville Volunteer Fire Departments started tearing through the rubble and fortunately were able to save seven lives. Later Monday afternoon the body of Lonnie Herriott and while searching through the night recovered the body of Joseph Graham. While firefighters were on site searching through the rubble with temperatures in the nineties, local community organizations such as the Chesed Fund jumped into action and brought enough ice cold water for all emergency personnel and residents living in the neighborhood.
Throughout the night, investigators from BPD, Crime Lab, ATF and other agencies combed through the debris looking for any clues as to the cause. They remained on scene for 2-3 days carefully categorizing every shred of evidence, taking pictures of each and working in tandem with other investigating agencies on site.
Simultaneously, our office, OEM and the Red Cross worked diligently talking to each displaced resident ensuring they had food to eat and a place to stay.
Local churches, synagogues and non profits rallied around our 5th district residents to provide everything from emotional, religious and physical support. A fund was set up by the Associated Jewish Charities and CHAI ( https://payments.associated.org/pikesville. ) Over the course of the week, 5th district City Council office alongside OEM, Red Cross, Baltimore Police/Fire Departments, HABC and DPW helped all impacted residents with any and all of their needs. We set up an insurance day with the assistance of the Maryland Insurance Administration to help those impacted navigate the often complicated insurance process and working to expedite the process. Thursday and Friday were spent with volunteers from local synagogues that helped clean the insides of homes, hang pictures back on the walls and repair broken items that the blast caused.
To close out the weekend, on Sunday we co-hosted a community clean up with the Suburban Orthodox Congregation that was attended by over 400 people from all over Baltimore City and County. We collectively cleaned all trash and debris that flew into neighboring yards, filled up large dumpsters and reassured those impacted that they are not alone. When asked yesterday what I see on the 4200 block of Labyrinth Rd, my reply was simple, "Where people see rubble, I see building blocks." Yesterday we followed that vision. The healing process began and made way for the re-building process to begin by removing the horrific site that shook this quiet neighborhood just seven days ago.
We would like to thank the Baltimore City Fire Department, Baltimore Police Department, Baltimore City Office of Emergency Management, RedCross, MTA, Baltimore City Department of Public Works, Baltimore County Fire Department, Pikesville Volunteer Fire Company, HOME DEPOT, BGE, Mayor Jack Young, Council President Brandon Scott, CHAI,HABC, The Chesed Fund, Frank Storch, Blue Ocean, Harvest Fare Wabash, Queen B Pest Control, Pikesville Tree Service, Adina B, Tov Pizza, Shoprite of Howard Park, Lowe's of Catonsville, Price Busters Furniture, DMAC Security, Maryland Insurance Commission, Sudsville Laundry and everyone else who has been so generous and supportive of our community.